README.md

Synopsis

Need to send background notifications to an iPhone application over a persistent connection in Ruby? Keep reading...

The Story

So you're building the server component of an iPhone application in Ruby and you want to send background notifications through the Apple Push Notification servers. This doesn't seem too bad at first, but then you read in the Apple Documentation that Apple's servers may treat non-persistent connections as a Denial of Service attack. Since Rails has no easy way to maintain a persistent connection internally, things start to look complicated.

This gem includes a background daemon which processes background messages from your application and sends them along to Apple over a single, persistent socket. It also includes the ability to query the Feedback service, helper methods for enqueueing your jobs, and a sample monit config to make sure the background worker is around when you need it.

Yet another ApplePushNotification interface?

Yup. There's some great code out there already, but we didn't like the idea of getting banned from the APN gateway for establishing a new connection each time we needed to send a batch of messages, and none of the libraries I found handled maintaining a persistent connection.

Current Status

This gem has been used in production, on 500px, sending hundreds of millions, if not, billions of notifications.

Usage

APN sender can use Resque or Sidekiq to send asynchronous messages, if none of them are installed it creates a new thread to send messages.

1. Use a background processor or not.

You can either use Resque or Sidekiq, I strongly advice using Sidekiq, as apn_sender uses a connection pool for the apple socks.

2. Queueing Messages From Your Application

To queue a message for sending through Apple's Push Notification service from your Rails application:

APN.notify_async(token, opts_hash)

Where token is the unique identifier of the iPhone to receive the notification and opts_hash can have any of the following keys:

:alert ## The alert to send

:badge ## The badge number to send

:sound ## The sound file to play on receipt, or true to play the default sound installed with your app

Check logs/apn_sender.log for debugging output. In addition to logging any major errors there, apn_sender hooks into the Resque::Worker logging to display any verbose or very_verbose worker output in apn_sender.log file as well.
On latest versions apn_sender will use Rails.logger as the default logger.

4. Checking Apple's Feedback Service

Since push notifications are a fire-and-forget sorta deal, where you get no indication if your message was received (or if the specified recipient even exists), Apple needed to come up with some other way to ensure their network isn't clogged with thousands of bogus messages (e.g. from developers sending messages to phones where their application used to be installed, but where the user has since removed it). Hence, the Feedback Service.

It's actually really simple - you connect to them periodically and they give you a big dump of tokens you shouldn't send to anymore. The gem wraps this up nicely -- just call:

If you're interested in knowing exactly when Apple determined each token was expired (which can be useful in determining if the application re-registered with your service since it first appeared in the expired queue):

The Feedback Service works as a big queue. When you connect it pops off all its data and sends it over the wire at once, which means connecting a second time will return an empty array, so for ease of use a call to either +tokens+ or +data+ will connect once and cache the data. If you call either one again it'll continue to use its cached version (rather than connecting to Apple a second time to retrieve an empty array, which is probably not what you want).

Forcing a reconnect is as easy as calling either method with the single parameter +true+, but be sure you've already used the existing data because you'll never get it back.

Warning: No really, check Apple's Feedback Service occasionally

If you're sending notifications, you should definitely call one of the receive methods periodically, as Apple's policies require it and they apparently monitor providers for compliance. I'd definitely recommend throwing together a quick rake task to take care of this for you (the whenever library provides a nice wrapper around scheduling tasks to run at certain times (for systems with cron enabled)).

Just for the record, this is essentially what you want to have whenever run periodically for you: